-Still in the fitting room.If the shoe fits.....
-Still in the fitting room.If the shoe fits.....
-Protons can not move or carry it's ELECTRIC CHARGE to anywhere in this post's original example.That's all great but it's not germane to the simple question of is the superset of ELECTRIC conventional current only restricted to the physical movements of the ELECTRON current subset. The answer to that is clearly no.
Electric current is a flow of electric charge. Charge can be positive (protons) or negative (electrons), and conventional current is not wrong or backwards.
Agree -- and, since it is NOT current flow, it should not be expressed in terms of amperes, which is the flow of charge, not electrons.Understanding electric circuits in terms of electron flow (as long as the conductors are solids) is fine for a technician repairing a circuit. It's just not current flow, by definition in electrical theory.
That's all great but it's not germane to the simple question of is the superset of ELECTRIC conventional current only restricted to the physical movements of the ELECTRON current subset. The answer to that is clearly no.
Electric current is a flow of electric charge. Charge can be positive (protons) or negative (electrons), and conventional current is not wrong or backwards.
Since the carrier of charge is the electron, and since current is defined as the transport of charge across a fixed point for a fixed interval of time, current falls out of the equation as the number of electrons which cross that point in the allocated time.In a wire, the electrons flow one direction but the charge flows the other (because the electrons carry a negative charge). Since electric current is defined as the flow of charge (not of charge carriers) then electric current is in the direction opposite the flow of electrons.
Whether Ben made the best choice or not is irrelevant. The fact remains that the charge on the electron is currently defined as a negative quantity and the voltages we work with have polarities that are consistent with that definition.Since the carrier of charge is the electron, and since current is defined as the transport of charge across a fixed point for a fixed interval of time, current falls out of the equation as the number of electrons which cross that point in the allocated time.
Benjamin Franklin must have confused you.
Well, that person is mistaken and it's a good thing to set them on the right path. I understand the reasons to think in terms of physical particles in the right context but teaching electron flow was an early shortcut for military technicians in the 40's who'd never had any science classes (I've been to several military electronic schools) to get up to speed with tube circuits and in that context the electron flow in tubes with the water flow analogy as energy flow was intuitive to students in simple circuit analysis. My personal belief is the water/physical analogy intuition is a prime driver for this debate as I see it used frequently by people who seem to see a great importance in the physical particle current flow as maybe a means of energy flow in most modern electrical circuits. When we say a digital circuit is sourcing and sinking current do we care about electron flow?Hello there,
Apparently it is not germane to YOU because you are interpreting the original question as completely open ended. But questions like this are usually asked because the asking person already knows there are two interpretations of what electric current is.
What you keep dancing around, but won't deal with, is what is the electrical current in the connecting wire in amperes?Hi,
I dont think we have to bring time into it, but Ok, here's a question.
We have two spheres connected by a horizontal thin wire.
The sphere on the right has a net negative charge at t=0.
The sphere on the left has a net positive charge at t=0 equal to the negative charge at t=0.
After some time passes, equilibrium is reached such that both spheres have a net charge of zero.
The question is, what happened in the wire that made the two spheres end up having equal (and balanced) charges?
In theory we can state that positive charge moved from left to right.
But we can also say that negative charge moved from right to left.
Either way we get the same end result, but it's quite easy to understand that electrons moved from right to left because there is nothing else physical that can move.
In order to physically move a positive charge we'd have to move one of the atoms in the wire from left to right, and i dont think that is going to happen anytime soon
because they are bound to the structure, bound by more (bound) electrons that hold them tightly in place.
But if we are somehow accepting all theory as reality itself, then we can say all kinds of stuff is true. When we lift a 100 pound weight 10 feet off the ground, it somehow attains more 'energy' than it had before we lifted it, according to theory. But if we move two bodies apart in space that have gravitational attraction and we say that body B has more energy now, then what happens if we remove body A, where did our 'energy' goEnergy just doesnt disappear.

Irrelevant. The electron, which IS carrying the charge, is carrying a charge that is NEGATIVE! What happens when you multiply a positive number times a negative number?-Protons can not move or carry it's ELECTRIC CHARGE to anywhere in this post's original example.
I don't think the water flow analogy is the problem. It's that so many people can't grasp that there is a difference between counting charge carriers and counting the charge that they carry. I think a bigger underlying problem in that is that there are few instances in every day life where we routinely deal with something that can have positive or negative values. Humans are not good at dealing with negative quantities, and so we have gone out of our way to banish them from everyday life as much as possible. About the only instance where it is natural to have bipolar quantities that I can think of immediately off the top of my head are financial transactions, and even there we mask this nature by splitting things into "debit" and "credit" transactions and embedding the polarity distinctions in the formulas we use to combine them.Well, that person is mistaken and it's a good thing to set them on the right path. I understand the reasons to think in terms of physical particles in the right context but teaching electron flow was an early shortcut for military technicians in the 40's who'd never had any science classes (I've been to several military electronic schools) to get up to speed with tube circuits and in that context the electron flow in tubes with the water flow analogy as energy flow was intuitive to students in simple circuit analysis. My personal belief is the water/physical analogy intuition is a prime driver for this debate as I see it used frequently by people who seem to see a great importance in the physical particle current flow as maybe a means of energy flow in most modern electrical circuits. When we say a digital circuit is sourcing and sinking current do we care about electron flow?
- " Oh, people talk about electrons and such but it's really the magic smoke trapped inside that does your bidding " What magic smoke.![]()
Understanding electric circuits in terms of electron flow (as long as the conductors are solids) is fine for a technician repairing a circuit. It's just not current flow, by definition in electrical theory. The end game in electronics is to control the force of electrical energy by the manipulation of magic smoke in physical devices. Oh, people talk about electrons and such but it's really the magic smoke trapped inside that does your bidding.
-Electric Current is defined as flow of charge, BUT no charge will flow anywhere without a CARRIER which this post originally stated as the ELECTRON and IT'S currentSince the carrier of charge is the electron, and since current is defined as the transport of charge across a fixed point for a fixed interval of time, current falls out of the equation as the number of electrons which cross that point in the allocated time.
Benjamin Franklin must have confused you.
-" What happens when you multiply a positive number times a negative number "Irrelevant. The electron, which IS carrying the charge, is carrying a charge that is NEGATIVE! What happens when you multiply a positive number times a negative number?
- " Well, that person is mistaken and it's a good thing to set them on the right path. "Well, that person is mistaken and it's a good thing to set them on the right path. I understand the reasons to think in terms of physical particles in the right context but teaching electron flow was an early shortcut for military technicians in the 40's who'd never had any science classes (I've been to several military electronic schools) to get up to speed with tube circuits and in that context the electron flow in tubes with the water flow analogy as energy flow was intuitive to students in simple circuit analysis. My personal belief is the water/physical analogy intuition is a prime driver for this debate as I see it used frequently by people who seem to see a great importance in the physical particle current flow as maybe a means of energy flow in most modern electrical circuits. When we say a digital circuit is sourcing and sinking current do we care about electron flow?
Just more nonsensical sophistry.Whether Ben made the best choice or not is irrelevant. The fact remains that the charge on the electron is currently defined as a negative quantity and the voltages we work with have polarities that are consistent with that definition.
If a positive number of electrons cross a given point, in the reference direction, in the allocated time, the charge that has crossed the point, in the reference direction, is a negative quantity and current is defined not as the number of electrons that cross the point per second, but as the amount of charge that crosses it. Hence, if a positive number of electrons cross a given point, in the reference direction, in the allocated time, the current that crosses that point in that direction is negative.
Talk about nonsense.Just more nonsensical sophistry.
If, at Indianapolis, each car carries a negative charge, does that mean that each one goes one less lap for every cycle around the track?